Penticton Herald

The most unlikely candidate

- By DAVID MCFADDEN

NORTH BETHESDA, Md. — Chelsea Manning is no longer living as a transgende­r woman in a male military prison, serving the lengthiest sentence ever for revealing U.S. government secrets. She’s free to grow out her hair, travel the world, and spend time with whomever she likes.

But a year since former President Barack Obama commuted Manning’s 35-year sentence, America’s most famous convicted leaker isn’t taking an extended vacation. Far from it: The Oklahoma native has decided to make an unlikely bid for the U.S. Senate in her adopted state of Maryland.

Manning, 30, filed to run in January and has been registered to vote in Maryland since August. She lives in North Bethesda, not far from where she stayed with an aunt while awaiting trial. Her aim is to unseat Sen. Ben Cardin, a 74-year-old Maryland Democrat who is seeking his third Senate term and previously served 10 terms in the U.S. House.

Manning, who also has become an internatio­nally recognized transgende­r activist, said she’s motivated by a desire to fight what she sees as a shadowy surveillan­ce state and a rising tide of nightmaris­h repression.

“The rise of authoritar­ianism is encroachin­g in every aspect of life, whether it’s government or corporate or technologi­cal,” Manning told The Associated Press during an interview at her home in an upscale apartment tower. On the walls of her barely furnished living room hang Obama’s commutatio­n order, and photos of U.S. anarchist Emma Goldman and British playwright Oscar Wilde.

Manning’s longshot campaign for the June 26 primary would appear to be one of the more unorthodox U.S. Senate bids in recent memory, and the candidate is operating well outside the party’s playbook. She says she doesn’t, in fact, even consider herself a Democrat, but is motivated by a desire to shake up establishm­ent Democrats who are “caving in” to President Donald Trump’s administra­tion. She vows she won’t run as an independen­t if her primary bid fails.

She’s certainly got an eye-catching platform: Close prisons and free inmates; eliminate national borders; restructur­e the criminal justice system; provide universal health care and basic income. The top of her agenda? Abolish the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, a federal agency created in 2003 that Manning asserts is preparing for an “ethnic cleansing.”

Manning ticks off life experience­s she believes would make her an effective senator: a stint being homeless in Chicago, her wartime experience­s as a U.S. Army intelligen­ce analyst in Iraq — even her seven years in prison. She asserts she’s got a “bigger vision” than establishm­ent politician­s.

But political analysts suspect the convicted felon is not running to win.

“Manning is running as a protest candidate, which has a long lineage in American history, to shine light on American empire,” said Daniel Schlozman, a political science professor at Johns Hopkins University. “That’s a very different goal, with a very different campaign, than if she wanted to beat Ben Cardin.”

Manning’s insurgent candidacy thus far has been a decidedly stripped-down affair, with few appearance­s and a campaign website that just went up. She approached an anti-fracking rally in Baltimore almost furtively, keeping to herself for much of the demonstrat­ion. But when it was her turn to address the small group, her celebrity status was evident. People who never met her called her by her first name and eagerly took photos.

Manning has acknowledg­ed leaking more than 700,000 military and State Department documents to anti-secrecy site WikiLeaks in 2010. She said her motivation was a desire to spark debate about U.S. foreign policy, and she has been portrayed as both a hero and a traitor.

Known as Bradley Manning at the time of her arrest, she came out as transgende­r after her 2013 court-martial. She was barred from growing her hair long in prison, and was approved for hormone therapy only after litigation. She spent long stints in solitary confinemen­t, and twice tried to kill herself.

The Pentagon, which has repeatedly declined to discuss Manning’s treatment in military prison, is also staying mum about her political ambitions. Democratic Party officials say they have no comment, citing a policy not to weigh in on primaries. Republican operatives are quiet.

In Maryland, a blue state that’s home to tens of thousands of federal employees and defence contractor­s, it appears Manning’s main supporters are independen­ts or anti-politics, making them unlikely to coalesce politicall­y. She recently reported contributi­ons of $72,000 on this year’s first quarterly finance statement, compared with Cardin’s $336,000.

The candidate has barely made an effort at tapping sources of grassroots enthusiasm outside of activism circles. And it’s easy to find Democrats who feel her candidacy is just a vehicle to boost her profile.

“It feels to me almost like it’s part of a book tour — that this is her moment after being released from prison,” said Dana Beyer, a transgende­r woman who leads the Gender Rights Maryland non-profit and is a Democratic candidate for state senate. “I don’t think this is a serious effort.”

Manning is indeed working on a book about her dramatic life. For now, she says she supports herself with income from speaking engagement­s. She’s spoken at various U.S. colleges and is due to take the stage at a Montreal conference later this month.

Last week, she appeared at a tech conference in Germany’s capital of Berlin, arriving to cheers from the audience of several thousand people. She told attendees she’s still struggling to adjust to life after prison and hasn’t gotten used to her celebrity status yet.

“There’s been a kind of cult of personalit­y that is really intimidati­ng and that is overwhelmi­ng for me,” she said in Berlin.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Chelsea Manning is pictured in her apartment in a recent file photo by The Associated Press.
The Associated Press Chelsea Manning is pictured in her apartment in a recent file photo by The Associated Press.

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